Prepare for the Fair: 3 lecture series on pottery with artists and experts- SOLD OUT

This series is sold out.

Learn more about pottery, the theme of the 2016 Heard Museum Guild Indian Fair & Market, in this series of three Thursday lectures. Whether youâ€™re dipping your toe in Native art collecting or are a seasoned buyer, these talks, offered by the Heard Museum Guild, will prove helpful. The Fair will be held on Saturday and Sunday, March 5 & 6.

Lanmon, a student and collector of Pueblo pottery, is the co-author with Frank Harlow of four comprehensive books on the pottery of the Zia, Santa Ana, Zuni, and Acoma Pueblos.

Mark Tahbo has been a potter since he was in high school. Tahbo is recognized as a master potter and has received numerous awards for his work; they include the Best of Show Award at the SWAIA Indian Market in Santa Fe and Best of Division at the Heard Indian Fair.

Diana Pardue, Curator of Collections at the Heard Museum.

Nora Naranjo-Morse (Santa Clara Pueblo), potter.

Feb. 4 — Diana Pardue, â€ś1890-1920 Pottery of the Southwestâ€ť and Nora Naranjo-Morse (Santa Clara Pueblo), â€śThe Language and Themes of Pottery.â€ť Pardue is curator of collections at the Heard Museum, where she has worked since 1978. Her curatorial work has focused upon both historic and contemporary American Indian arts particularly jewelry and pottery. Naranjo-Morse is an acclaimed artist who works with clay, metal, digital video and earth. Naranjo-Morse’s work has exhibited nationally at numerous museums and internationally. She continues to explore issuesÂ of environment, culture and the social practice of making art with community.

Feb. 11 — Robert Tenorio (Santo Domingo), â€śThe Language and Themes of Potteryâ€ť and Bruce McGee, â€śPottery Artists at the Fair.â€ť Tenorio specializes in hand coiled traditional Santo Domingo pottery. Tenorio is continuously experimenting with different types of plants in hopes of making the special black color which was used on pottery several hundred years ago. McGee is the director of retail sales at the Heard. A third-generation trader born in Ganado, Ariz. and raised in Keams Canyon, McGee came to the Heard in 1998 at the request of former Shop director Byron Hunter.

To see the complete “Prepare for the Fair” lecture schedule, click here.

The Prepare for the Fair series is supported by the Margaret A. Cargill Foundation.

Our Mission

The mission of the Heard Museum is to be the worldâ€™s preeminent museum for the presentation, interpretation and advancement of
American Indian art, emphasizing its intersection with broader artistic and cultural themes.